• Closeup of woman and door - Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris

    “Heritage” by Claude McKay

    Now the dead past seems vividly alive,
   
    And in this shining moment I can trace,

    Down through the vista of the vanished years,
   
    Your faun-like form, your fond elusive face.
     
    And suddenly come secret spring’s released,
   
    And unawares a riddle is revealed,
    
And I can read like large, black-lettered print,
   
    What seemed before a thing forever sealed.
     
    I know the magic word, the graceful thought,
   
    The song that fills me in my lucid hours,

    The spirit’s wine that thrills my body through,
   
    And makes me music-drunk, are yours, all yours.
     
    I cannot praise, for you have passed from praise,
   
    I have no tinted thoughts to paint you true;

    But I can feel and I can write the word;
   
    The best of me is but the least of you.

     

  • plum tree flowers

    “The Widow’s Lament in Springtime” by William Carlos Williams

    Sorrow is my own yard
    where the new grass
    flames as it has flamed
    often before but not
    with the cold fire
    that closes round me this year.
    Thirtyfive years
    I lived with my husband.
    The plumtree is white today
    with masses of flowers.
    Masses of flowers
    load the cherry branches
    and color some bushes
    yellow and some red
    but the grief in my heart
    is stronger than they
    for though they were my joy
    formerly, today I notice them
    and turn away forgetting.
    Today my son told me
    that in the meadows,
    at the edge of the heavy woods
    in the distance, he saw
    trees of white flowers.
    I feel that I would like
    to go there
    and fall into those flowers
    and sink into the marsh near them.

    –Photo by Roger Whiteway

    National Poetry Month

  • lighthouse at night

    “The sound of the sea” by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

    The sea awoke at midnight from its sleep,
    And round the pebbly beaches far and wide
    I heard the first wave of the rising tide
    Rush onward with uninterrupted sweep;
    A voice out of the silence of the deep,
    A sound mysteriously multiplied
    As of a cataract from the mountain’s side,
    Or roar of winds upon a wooded steep.
    So comes to us at times, from the unknown
    And inaccessible solitudes of being,
    The rushing of the sea-tides of the soul;
    And inspirations, that we deem our own,
    Are some divine foreshadowing and foreseeing
    Of things beyond our reason or control.

    –Photo by Hydromet

    National Poetry Month

  • Cemetery seraphim

    “Autumn Valentine” by Dorothy Parker

    In May my heart was breaking-
    Oh, wide the wound, and deep!
    And bitter it beat at waking,
    And sore it split in sleep.

    And when it came November,
    I sought my heart, and sighed,
    “Poor thing, do you remember?”
    “What heart was that?” it cried.

    National Poetry Month